Authors: C J Cherryh
Majat-language boomed and shrilled in the tunnel, deafening. And, terrible in its volume, came Her voice, which vibrated in the earth.
Raen gathered herself and passed beside that great body, moving faster than ever Mother could. There was room, barely, that she and the men with her could avoid the sweep of Mother’s limbs, that struggled with even thrusts to drive Her vast body along, at every rumbling intake of Her breath.
“I am here!” Raen cried.
“Kethiuy-queen,” She answered. The great head did not turn, could not; Mother remained fixed upon Her goal.
“Am I welcome, Mother? Where are you going?”
“I go,” Mother said simply, and the earth quivered with the moving of Her. Air sucked in-again. “I go. Haste. Haste, young queen.”
Anxiety overwhelmed her. She increased her pace, moving now among the Drones, whose chittering voices hurt her ears.
Then the Workers, all that vast horde, azi scattered among them; and the strange-jawed egg-tenders, leaving their work, precious eggs abandoned.
She looked back. Mother had almost vanished in the shadows. She saw Merry’s bruised face in the faint blue glow, felt the touch of his hand.
“We’re going north,” she said, comprehension suddenly coming on her, the Workers who had plied the basement, the preparation of a way.
“To fight for them?” Merry asked hoarsely, and glanced back himself, for there were men who still followed. Perhaps they all did; strung out through the tunnel, it was no longer possible to see. Perhaps some collapsed in withdrawal, gone mad from fear; or perhaps training held, and they had no sensible dread.
“I belong,” she said, “where this merges.”
“Where, sera?”
“Home,” she said.
A horde of steps approached the steel doors, a surge of panicked voices. Moth stirred, lifted her head, although to do so took more strength than she had left to spend on them, who troubled her sleeping and merged with dreams.
“Moth!” A voice came out of the turmoil. She knew this one too, old Moran, and fear trembled in that sound. “Moth! Thon is gone—
gone
. The hive-masters couldn’t hold them. They’re in the City. Everywhere—”
She touched her microphone, braced before her on the console, beside the wine bottle and her gun. “Then lock your own doors, Moran. Follow my example.”
“We need the codes. Moth, do something.”
She grinned, her head bobbing slightly with weakness. “But haven’t you figured it out yet, Moran? I am.”
“The city’s in wreckage,” the voice from
Moriah
said. “Leo, Leo, we’ve still had no contact with him. There were majat here. Even they’ve left, moved elsewhere. He should have been in contact by now.”
“Hold the ships,” Leo repeated, and looked up at the other azi, his own and the station’s. They were exhausted. There had been no food, no off-shift. He thought that he ought to send for something to eat. He was not sure that he had appetite for it.
The betas sat in a knot over to the side of the door. One of them had become ill, holding his heart. He was an older beta. They fed him medicines and he seemed to have recovered somewhat; this was of no concern, for he was not a necessary beta. None were, individually.
“Call the galley,” Leo said to one of the others. “Have food brought up here.”
The beta rose, came, moved very carefully while he was at the corn board. He spoke precisely the request and retreated again among his fellows. Leo stood watching them.
Moriah
and the shuttle called again, on the quarter hour; and again.
Then a light flashed at the door, and a cart arrived from the galleys, redolent with food and drink. Azi brought it, unloaded it, bent to unload the lower tray.
Suddenly a gun was in one azi hand and a bolt flew for comp, raked it. Leo fired, and the azi spun back against the doorway, slid down. Others froze in dismay, died so.
Lights flickered. Sirens started sounding, lights all over the board flaring red.
“He’s a plant,” one said, bending over the azi who had fired. He wiped with his thumb at the too-bright tattoo. “A ringer.”
The sirens multiplied. The betas rushed to the boards and worked at them frantically, and Leo hesitated from one threat to the other, null-mind pressing at him. “Get away!” he shouted at the betas. One of his men fired, and a beta died at the main board, slumped over it.
A sign began flashing in the overhead. DISENGAGE ALL SHIPS, it ordered.
The ship
. Sanity returned with that responsibility. Leo fired, taking out the betas who would not obey his shouted orders, and leaned over com, punched it wide-broadcast. “
Eros
crew.” His voice fed from the corridors outside and throughout the station. “This is Leo. Return to the ship at once. Return to the ship at once.”
It was necessary to hold that, above all else. Morn would expect it. “Go,” he shouted at the others with him.
And then because it occurred to him that he dared not leave betas near controls, he killed them, every one.
“They’re running,” the young Upcoaster said, leaning against the glass and pressed to it, staring up the outside concourse.
“Don’t!” another cried, when he pushed the door open.
There were no shots, only a breath of cold air of the docks.
“Come on!” Itavvy cried at his wife, snatched Meris from her arms; and the Upcoasters sprang for the doors too, all of them starting to run, baggage left, everything left.
The floodlights on the vast docks were flickering, red lights gashing warnings, sirens braying. Itavvy sucked a lungful of the thin cold air and pelted after the artist, cast a look over his shoulder to see that Velin followed. Tears blurred the lights when he looked round again, a flickering that spelled out
Phoenix
. The ramp was ahead of them, through a tangle of lines. Someone fell behind him, scrambled up again. The artist took the ramp; Itavvy did, Meris wailing in his ear, and for that, for
her
he did not fall, although he felt pain in his side and his chest. They ran the frozen ramp, over the plates that should have moved to help them.
And the hatch was shut.
“
Let us in!
” he screamed at it. Others caught up with him, hammered at the metal with their fists. Itavvy wept, tears streaming his face, and Velin flung her arms about them both, him and Meris.
It was the oldest Upcoaster who found the intercom recessed in the ramp housing. He shouted into it. “Shut up!” he yelled back at them when they added their voices; and from the intercom: “
Stand by.
”
The hatch hummed, parted. Azi crewmen, their faces sober and unamazed, stood waiting to help them aboard.
They stood inside, with trembling hands proffered tickets, evidence of passage.
The hatch sealed behind them.
“Brace where you are,” a voice grated from the intercom overhead. “We’re disengaging and getting out of here.”
The shrilling was louder, front walls, back walls, on all sides of them, and what had begun in the dark of night refused to go away by day, when light streamed over the garden. It should dispel the nightmare. It instead made it real, picking out the shapes of poised Warriors, the husks and bodies of the dead piled in the corner of the garden, and the cracks in the outer wall where assault had already been made and repulsed.
Jim wiped at his face, crouching by Max’s side among the rocks. Pol was by him: they spared one young azi to keep a gun in Pol’s ribs constantly, for whatever the Kontrin was, he was a born-man and old in such manoeuvrings, able to forewarn them what the hives might do…most of all what the human mind among them might do.
He’s there,
Pol had said, when the last assault had nearly carried to them, when cracks had appeared in the wall and fire from the gate had distracted them.
That’s Morn behind that. The next thing is to watch our backs
.
And that proved true.
“He’s delayed over-long,” Pol said after a time. “I’m surprised. He should have tried by now. That means he and his allies are up to something that takes a little time.”
Jim looked at him. The Kontrin’s accustomed manner was mockery; Pol used little of that in recent hours. His gaunt face was yet more hollowed, his eyes shadowed with the exhaustion which sat on them all. The high heat would come by mid-morning; they wore sunsuits, but neither masks nor visors in place, and the sleeves were all unfastened for comfort. Azi rested in their places, slumped against rocks or walls, seeking what sleep could be gotten, for they had had little in the night. Pol leaned his head back against the rock that sheltered them, eyes shut.
“What would take time?” Max wondered aloud.
“Tunnels,” Jim said, the thought leaping unwanted into his mind. He swallowed heavily and tried to reason around it. “But Warriors don’t dig and Workers don’t fight.”
Pol lifted his head. “Azi do both,” he said, and shifted around to face forward. “Look at the cracks in that wall. They’re wider.”
It was so. Jim bit at his lips, rose and went aside, where one of the Warriors crouched…touched its offered scent-patches.
“Jim. Yess.”
“Warrior, the wall’s cracking over there. Pol Hald thinks there could be digging.”
The great head rotated, body shifted, directed toward the wall. “Human eyess…certain, Jim?”
“I can see it, Warrior. A crack in the shape of a tree, spreading and branching. It gets wider.”
Chelae brushed him; palps flicked over his cheek. “Good, good,” Warrior approved, and scuttled off. It sought and locked jaws with the next, and that one moved off into the house, while Warrior continued, touching jaws with each of the Warriors nearest, who spread in turn to pass the message further.
Jim slid back into position next Max and Pol. “It’s disturbed about it,” he panted. He shivered despite the warmth, suddenly realising that he was terrified. They had fought in the night; he had never fired his gun. Now at the prospect of their shelter breached by daylight he sat trembling.
“Easy,” Pol said, put out a thin hand and closed it on his leg until it hurt. The pain focused things. He looked at the Kontrin, suddenly aware of a vast silence, that the shrilling which had surrounded them had fallen away.
“You’re always with Morn,” Jim said hoarsely, for it did not make sense, the tapes with the behaviour of Pol Hald. “You’re out of his house. You wouldn’t go against him.”
“A long partnership.” The hand did not move, though it was gentler. “In the Family, such are rare.”
Treachery,
what he had learned warned him. He stared at the Kontrin, paralysed by the touch he should never have allowed.
“Strange,” Pol said, “that at times you have even her look about you.”
The shrilling erupted again; and a portion of the garden sank away, gaping darkness aboil with earth and majat bodies. Blues sprang, engaged; shots streaked from azi weapons.
The wall went down, collapsed in a cloud of dust: through it came a horde of majat, azi among them.
Jim braced the gun and sighted, tried to pull the trigger. Beside him a body collapsed, limp.
It was Max. A shot had gone through his brain. Jim stared down at him, numb with horror.
The azi on the other side cried warning, sprawled back unconscious. Pol had Max’s rifle and whipped it from a backward blow at his guard to aim it up, putting shots into the majat horde, dropping azi and majat with no distinction.
Jim sighted amid them and pulled the trigger, firing into the oncoming mass, unsure what damage he did, his eyes blurred so that it was impossible to see anything clearly.
The sound swelled in his ears, a horrid chirring that ascended out of range. Majat poured from the house behind them, more Warriors than he had known were there. Majat swarmed from the pit before them and through the breached wall; and came on them like a living wave. Pol fired indiscriminately; he did; more came to replace the fallen, as a wider portion of the wall collapsed, exposing their flank.
“Move back!” Pol shouted at him. “Get your men back!” The Kontrin sprang up low and took a new position.
Jim shouted a half-coherent order and scrambled after, slid in at Pol’s side and started firing again.
Then eerie figures appeared among the majat, like majat in the mold of men, bearing each an insignia on the shoulder.
And one was among them that was clearly a man, in Hald Colour.
“Morn,” Pol said, and stopped firing.
Jim sighted for that target, missed; and fire came back, grazed his arm. Pol seized him, pulled him over as a lacery of fire cut overhead.
Majat voices boomed, and stone cracked. One of the portico pillars came down in the sudden rush of majat from the house, a sea of bodies; and among them ran naked majat-azi and azi in sunsuits brown with mud and blood.
Fire cut both ways. Majat and azi fell dying and were trampled by those behind. And one there was slighter than most, with black hair flying and a gun in a chitined fist. The azi by her died, rolled sprawling.
Jim fought to loose himself, flung himself over and saw Morn in the centre of the yard. Raen was blind to him. “Look out!” he screamed.
“
Morn!
” Pol yelled, hurled himself to his feet and fired.
Morn crumpled, the look of startlement still on his face. And startlement was on Raen’s face too, horror as she averted the gun. Pol sank to one knee, swore, and Jim seized at him, but Pol stood without his help, braced, fired a flurry of shots into the armoured invaders, who stood as if paralysed.
Raen did the same, and majat swept past the lines of her men, who hurled accurate fire into the opposing tide, majat meeting body to body, waves that collided and broke upon each other, with shrilling and booming. Heads rolled. Bodies thrashed in convulsions. More of the wall collapsed, and again they were flanked. Jim turned fire in that direction, and saw to his horror the majat sweeping down on them.
Pol’s accurate fire cut into them, shots pelting one after the other, precisely timed.
A body slid in from their rear: Merry, putting shots where they counted; and Raen next, whose fire was, like Pol’s, accurate. The shrilling died away; majat rushed from their rear, narrowly missing them in their blinding rush, and they dropped, tucked for protection.